The British government has completely failed Syria’s refugees

The scale of the tragedy requires a much greater response than the callous and disinterested one shown by the government.

The scale of the tragedy requires a much greater response than the callous and disinterested one shown by the government

With the unfolding drama in Iraq climbing to the top of the news agenda, the ongoing civil war in Syria is starting to take a backseat.

And yet the killing goes on regardless.

Almost 200,000 people have been killed in Syria since government forces opened fire on civilian protesters in 2011. Two million citizens have also fled to neighbouring states and another two million have been displaced inside the country.

For better or worse, back in August of last year the UK and US governments decided not to pursue military action against Syrian president Bashir al-Assad after he deployed chemical weapons on citizens in Ghouta, a suburb of the capital Damascus.

As a result, Assad continues to brutally repress dissent and the increasingly extremist-dominated opposition (extremist elements have received the lion’s share of financial support, thanks to Saudi Arabia and Qatar) have waged their own brutal campaign against Assad but also the moderate anti-Assad Free Syrian Army (FSA).

Finding themselves in between all of this have been Syria’s civilians, most of whom simply want to get on with their lives.

So regardless of whether or not one supported military intervention against Assad, it’s reasonable to expect the British government to stick to its humanitarian duty for those Syrians fleeing one of the world’s worst conflict zones. David Cameron has been talking a great deal about British values of late, and therefore it doesn’t seem too much to expect the government to uphold these when it comes to giving shelter to those fleeing conflict and persecution.

Yet as with so many issues, when it comes to the Syrian refugee crisis the government has been big on words but short on deeds.

Despite the vast scale of the human catastrophe in Syria, just 24 additional Syrian refugees have been allowed to enter Britain in the six months after David Cameron said that 500 refugees would be allowed in.

Now no one is saying that Britain should be responsible for taking all or even the biggest share of those fleeing Syria, but this is a truly pathetic response to a humanitarian crisis almost on the scale of Rwanda.

Even Britain’s pledge to settle 500 refugees is paltry when contrasted with other nations. Germany is the only nation that has so far responded adequately to the crisis, with pledges to admit 5,000 refugees. The country’s foreign minister also says the country is ready to take in more. Since 2012, Sweden has also taken in at least 14,000 Syrian refugees. Many countries in the Middle East have, for obvious geographical reasons, taken in many more.

But that doesn’t, as the government appears to believe, get Britain out off the hook when it comes to housing Syrian refugees. Hence why Amnesty International has described as “absolutely shameful” the British response to the crisis.

It’s one thing to play to anti-immigrant sentiment when it comes to economic migrants, but it’s plumbing new depths to pander to it when those at the sharp end are fleeing Ba’athist genocide.

Worse, some Tory backbenchers are lobbying David Cameron to take an even ‘tougher’ line on Syrian asylum seekers (what’s tough about shutting out some of the world’s most vulnerable people?). Former defence minister, Sir Gerald Howarth, said during a recent Commons debate that the number of Syrian refugees should be limited to hundreds rather than thousands because Britain is “a more densely populated country than France or Germany”.

As some Labour MPs shouted at the time: shame.

The reluctance of the government to take its fair share of Syrian refugees is worryingly apparent in its refusal to join the United Nations’ resettlement programme, claiming instead that it is setting up its own scheme – of which we’ve now seen the unimpressive results.

Syria may have dropped off the political agenda, and lamentable as that may be the issue of Syrian asylum seekers must not be allowed to join it. There’s a good chance that Syria will, for future generations, be considered the humanitarian crisis of our time. As such, the scale of the tragedy requires a much greater response than the callous and disinterested one shown thus far by the government.

20 Responses to “The British government has completely failed Syria’s refugees”

Just Visiting

and those 12,000 in Sweden may not be entirely happy – the Guardian writes:
“This massive movement of people has created a severe housing backlog,
forcing Arbetsförmedlingen, the Swedish government’s employment agency
(which also assists recent arrivals in finding accommodation and
subsidises their rent) to allocate newcomers to remote and isolated
villages in the north. Conditions here are tough and work hard to come
by.”
…
“Giwara finally settled in Helsingborg, where he now shares a hostel with
10 other immigrants. “We have only one kitchen and one bathroom. Some
of these guys have stayed in this place for 15 years,” he says. His face
leaves no doubt that he fears the same fate.”

Ignoring your propositional fallacy, the logic behind asylum states you go to the nearest safe country. There are many, many countries between us and Syria. Now, being part of the EU, we must adhere to their regulations, and anyone granted Asylum anywhere in the EU, must be allowed to travel freely, but, again, there are many safe countries between Syria and the EU.

Sometimes the fighters reminisce about life back in their home countries.”

EDIT:

And, honestly, I’m sick of our country sticking it’s nose where it doesn’t belong. It brings trouble, and nothing we do will bring about any good. It really, really, REALLY is best we do nothing at all. Are their guns pointing at us? No, then let them blow themselves up. If we intervene the Muslims will blame us one way or another, if we leave them to sort their own shit out, they cannot blame us and they’d much prefer it.

Yeah, we spent a billion on Libya, nothing to show for it, all the while, George Osborne and IDS are killing the nation under the guise of being skint. It’s like telling your kids you can’t afford that PS4 this Christmas, and then blowing ten grand on a new car.

Paul J

The rebels and the refugees are different people. The rebels truly ARE loathsome jihadis, and if you’re too ill-informed to realise that it’s because you listen to the MSM and a bunch of corrupted proagandists.

And as for the FSA, it’s them who wiped out their own existence. they joined hardocre Islamists, and got defeated by them. They no longer exist as anything other than a banner group and western MSM fantasy.

Alex McLeish

Maybe we should settle a few dozen Syrian men in James Bloodworth’s house? And at his parents’ house, and the the homes of all his female relatives. And if any of them complain we’ll just shout them down as racists.